Marshall s Producer Surplus and Value-Added: A Case for Protectionism? (A short note)

Similar documents
REASSESSING MARSHALL S PRODUCERS SURPLUS: A CASE FOR PROTECTIONISM

Midterm Exam Economics 181 PLEASE SHOW YOUR WORK! PUT YOUR NAME AND TA s NAME ON ALL PAGES 100 Points Total

Econ Global Inequality and Growth. Introduction. Gabriel Zucman

PAPER No. : Basic Microeconomics MODULE No. : 1, Introduction of Microeconomics

Poverty & Inequality

Online Appendices for Moving to Opportunity

Chapter 4 Specific Factors and Income Distribution

Thinkwell s Homeschool Economics Course Lesson Plan: 36 weeks

1. At the completion of this course, students are expected to: 2. Define and explain the doctrine of Physiocracy and Mercantilism

Chapter 5. Resources and Trade: The Heckscher-Ohlin

Chapter 5. Resources and Trade: The Heckscher-Ohlin Model

International Trade Theory College of International Studies University of Tsukuba Hisahiro Naito

Institutional Research Consultancy Unit. RMIT University. Environmental Scan. General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) Volume 1.

Nominal and Effective Rates of Protection by Industry in Pakistan: A Tariff Based Analysis

Andreas Hornstein. Doctor of Philosophy, Economics, University of Minnesota, Diplom, Economics, Universität Konstanz, Germany, 1984

The Political Economy of State-Owned Enterprises. Carlos Seiglie, Rutgers University, N.J. and Luis Locay, University of Miami. FL.

The Backlash Against Globalization

Global trade in the aftermath of the global crisis

Dartmouth College Department of Economics Winter 2002 ECONOMICS 49 TOPICS IN INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS

Chapter 4. Preview. Introduction. Resources, Comparative Advantage, and Income Distribution

Volume Title: NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2000, Volume 15. Volume URL:

Globalization: What Did We Miss?

Chapter 2 Comparative Advantage

Problems Involved in Improving the Quality of Life in Albania in the Years

Regional Economic Integration: Theoretical Concepts and their Application to the ASEAN Economic Community

Benefits and costs of free trade for less developed countries

Milton Friedman once called minimum wage one of the most, if not the most, anti-black laws

Chapter 17. The Labor Market and The Distribution of Income. Microeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools NINTH EDITION

A Shrinking Universe How Corporate Power Shapes Inequality

INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY From Tariffs to the New Protectionism

Labor Market Consequences of Immigration. Econ/Demog C175 Economic Demography Prof. Goldstein Spring 2018, UC Berkeley

CURRICULUM VITAE DARON ACEMOGLU

The International Law Annual Senior Lecturer, Kent Law School, Eliot College, University of Kent.

Trade theory and regional integration

Edexcel (A) Economics A-level

The Yale Journal of International Law Online. A World Trade Organization for Workers?

Thinkwell s Homeschool Microeconomics Course Lesson Plan: 31 weeks

RICARDO ON AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENTS: A NOTE

Globalization and Inequality. An International Comparison between Sweden and the US

Volume Title: Trade Policy Issues and Empirical Analysis. Volume URL:

Study Questions for George Reisman's Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics

LECTURE 1/2: THE GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CAPITALISM

Dr Kalecki on Mr Keynes

INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT

INTERNATIONAL TRADE. To accompany the Georgia International Business Curriculum. CTAE Resource Network, Instructional Resources Office, 2010

Governments in the advanced industrialized countries have progressively opened

LECTURE 1/2: THE GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CAPITALISM

1.2 Efficiency and Social Justice

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 3214

Cohen and DeLong are well-known economists, but they indict. Book Review. Growth and Policy. Journal of WINTER 2016 VOL. 19 N O.

Trade, Inequality & the Election

A 13-PART COURSE IN POPULAR ECONOMICS SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE

HARRY JOHNSON. Corden on Harry s View of the Scientific Enterprise

From Collected Works of Michał Kalecki Volume II (Jerzy Osiatinyński editor, Clarendon Press, Oxford: 1991)

THE PEARSON SERIES IN ECONOMICS

Introduction and overview

Readings for Ph.D. Students

Economic Contribution of Migrant Workers to Thailand

The Political Viability and Mass Popularity of Free Trade in Latin America

Question 4 BSc International Business and Politics International Political Economy Final Exam

Trade Policy and Research in an Era of Free Trade

GENERAI AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE. Twelfth Session of the Contracting Parties

Econ 133 Global Inequality and Growth. Gender inequality in the labor market. Gabriel Zucman

Chapter 10. Resource Markets and the Distribution of Income. Copyright 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.

Source: Piketty Saez. Share (in %), excluding capital gains. Figure 1: The top decile income share in the U.S., % 45% 40% 35% 30% 25%

When Thomas Piketty s Capital in the 21 st Century was published. Book Review. Anti-Piketty: Capital for the 21 st Century. Quarterly Journal of

Regional Economic Cooperation of ASEAN Plus Three: Opportunities and Challenges from Economic Perspectives.

AS-2606 B.COM. FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATION, 2013 ELEMENTS OF ECONOMICS MODEL ANSWER

POLITICAL ECONOMY AFTER THE CRISIS SPRING 2017 SOCIETIES OF THE WORLD - 31 LAW KENNEDY SCHOOL - PED 233 MONDAYS 1-3PM

The Relationship between Real Wages and Output: Evidence from Pakistan

CAMBRIDGE MONETARY THOUGHT

Trade and Investment for Inclusive Growth, Evidence and Elements of a Coherent Policy Framework Lessons from Southern Africa

# 1. Macroeconomics in a Marxian Perspective

The Effects of Trade Policy: A Global Perspective

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO BOULDER, COLORADO. Course Outline and Reading List

Economics 555 Potential Exam Questions

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 03) Exam #1 Fall 2009 (Version D) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each):

Stratification: Rich and Famous or Rags and Famine? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, FINANCE AND TRADE Vol. II - Globalization and the Evolution of Trade - Pasquale M. Sgro

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 12 RISING INEQUALITY March 5, 2019

An Essay in Bobology 1. W.MAX CORDEN University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

CRS-2 Production Sharing and U.S.-Mexico Trade When a good is manufactured by firms in more than one country, it is known as production sharing, an ar

Advanced Studies in International Economic Policy Research, International Trade: Theory and Policy

Are we truly globalizing the world marketplace? A critical view. Jonika Kromidha Faculty of Economy, University of Tirana, Albania,

GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE. L/1570/Rev.1* recognition that both the subject matter to be presented for discussion by the

Classical Political Economy. Week 2 University i of Wollongong

CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF LABOUR S FALLING INCOME SHARE AND GROWING INEQUALITY

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 14 RISING INEQUALITY March 6, 2018

ECON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES Instructor: Dr. Juergen Jung Towson University. J.Jung Chapter 18 - Trade Towson University 1 / 42

The Factor Content of U.S. Trade: An Explanation for the Widening Wage Gap?

6/4/2009. The Labor Market, Income, and Poverty. Microeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools O Sullivan, Sheffrin, Perez 6/e.

Community Voices on Causes and Solutions of the Human Rights Crisis in the United States

COMPARATIVE ECONOMIC SYSTEMS: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE BEFORE YOU BEGIN

AQA Economics A-level

POSC 4931 Topics in Political Science: Globalization and the Nation State Spring, (Senior Experience seminar in political science, POSC4996)

LECTURE 23: A SUMMARY OF CAPITAL IN THE 21 ST CENTURY

Session 6: Economic Impact of Migration on Receiving Countries: Public Finance, Growth and Inequalities

Ricardo: real or supposed vices? A Comment on Kakarot-Handtke s paper Paolo Trabucchi, Roma Tre University, Economics Department

The task-specialization hypothesis and possible productivity effects of immigration

International Economic Geography Migration

Transcription:

1 Marshall s Producer Surplus and Value-Added: A Case for Protectionism? (A short note) By Daniel Linotte, DPhil (Oxon) Senior Member, St Antony s College, Oxford June 2016 On several occasions, authors like Dani Rodrick and Thomas Piketty questioned the benefits of trade liberalization. The rationale for liberal economic policies refers inter alia to welfare concepts, in particular the so-called producer and consumer surpluses, namely two key-concepts which were first proposed by Alfred Marshall in his seminal work Principles of Economics, published in 1890. Thus, in the case of trade policy, relying on surpluses, it is recommended to remove tariffs and non-tariff barriers imposed on imports of commodities because such measures are expected to increase national welfare and, in theory at least, losers could be compensated with the use of adequate compensatory transfers from winners. Despite extensive uses, the concepts of surpluses still raise questions: 1) From a semantic perspective, the concept of producer s surplus, as it is presented in Marshall s seminal work, seems to be broader than what is proposed in the dominant economic discourse; in other words, workers should also be seen as producers. 2) Furthermore, considering international trade theory and policy, the concept of effective protection does refer to value-added, which encompasses all incomes (namely wages, profits ) generated by the production and the sale of products, which may correspond to what was initially defined as surpluses by Marshall. Following a review of Marshall s writings on surpluses as presented in Appendices K and H of his Principles (see section 1) and the theory of effective protection that refers to value-added, as originally developed by Max Corden (section 2), it is shown that a surplus concept based on value-added has implications in terms of welfare analysis of the impacts of liberal trade policies; eventually, it would not provide strong arguments for trade liberalization, it could even support protectionism (section 3). 1. Marshall s producers and corresponding surpluses Considering producers per se, in his Principles of Economics, Marshall mentions both producers and workers seen as (i) direct producers, with corresponding wages, and (ii) indirect producers, namely owners of capital: While national income or dividend is completely absorbed in remunerating the owner of each agent of production at its marginal rate, it yet generally yields him a surplus which has two distinct, though not independent sides. It yields to him, as consumer, a surplus consisting of the

2 excess of the total utility to him of the commodity over the real value to him of what he paid for it Another side of the surplus which a man derives from his surroundings is better seen when he is regarded as producer, whether by direct labor, or by the accumulated, that is acquired and saved, material resources in his possession (I underline). As a worker, he derives a worker's surplus, through being remunerated for all his work at the same rate as for that last part, which he is only just willing to render for its reward; though much of the work may have given him positive pleasure. As capitalist (or as owner of accumulated wealth in any form) he derives a saver's surplus through being remunerated for all his saving (Source: A. Marshall, Principles of Economics, Appendix K, Certain Kind of Surplus, 1, as provided on the web). In other words, stricto sensu, workers surpluses would correspond to pleasure given by work and their remuneration. Overall, despite some semantic vagueness, when considering Marshall s work, wages could or should be seen as a category of surplus reflecting the importance of workers as producers what they are in fact. 2. Max Corden s theory of effective protection Origins of effective protection Trade policy theory does make an important distinction between nominal and effective protection. One of the best presentations of the concept of effective protection was published by Corden in 1966 in the Journal of Political Economy, edited by Harry Gordon Johnson, who reviewed and commented a first version of the article that was already completed in 1964. Furthermore, in an autobiographic note on Effective Protection and I, Max Corden (2005) mentions an article written by Clarence Barber (1955), a Canadian economist, in which the expressions effective protection and effective level of protection were apparently used for the first time. Two definitions The nominal rate of protection (NRP) for a given industry is the relative increase in price permitted by the imposition of an import tariff. The corresponding effective rate of protection (ERP) is the relative increase of domestic incomes, or value-added, caused by the protective measure. In quantitative terms, NRP and ERP do normally correspond to different measures; ERP is generally much higher than NRP. 3. Value-added versus profit : implications for assessing trade policies Considering the impact of the removal of a tariff T imposed on the imports of a specific commodity by a small country that is confronted with a world price Pw, Figure 1, combining the domestic supply S (which, under normal conditions, is the industry marginal cost curve, including the wage element) and demand D for a given commodity, compares the traditional surplus perspective with the effective protection one, from a short term comparative statics perspective. Using traditional surpluses

3 The removal of the tariff T imposed on imports lower the price on the domestic market from (Pw + T) to Pw. As a result, domestic production falls from Q2 to Q1 and consumption increases from Q3 to Q4. In terms of welfare, the so-called producers lose profits or (1) because of the lower price and reduced sales. The state loses all duties, which corresponds to (3) in Figure 1. Consumers or buyers gain (1) + (2) + (3) + (4). In total, there is a net welfare gain for the small importing country that is equal to the traditional welfare triangles (2) and (4) and it is definitely a positive value, which justifies the removal of the import duty or, in other words, the adoption of free trade. Value-added perspective Wages are now added to profit when analyzing the welfare impacts of the removal of import duties. In other words, the wage element must be removed from the supply curve S and what remain are the industry marginal costs or IMC in Figure 1 - related to various inputs, not the factors of production, which does not prevent suppliers from continuing their quest for a maximum profit along the supply curve S. Again, the elimination of the import duty affects profits earned by firms, state revenues and consumers welfare which corresponds to the traditional welfare triangles. The loss of wages must now be added to the picture and it corresponds to the difference between the supply curve and the industry marginal cost curve IMC related to the use of inputs. Thus, the loss of wages caused by the reduction of production from Q2 to Q1 corresponds to (2) + (5) and the total welfare change for the country is (4) (5), which can be a loss, depending on the relative size of (4) and (5). Such an outcome may not represent a case for free trade, on the contrary, there could even be an argument for protectionism. Final remarks - The case for free trade has been questioned by various authors. The short and simple analysis I propose supports such views. - In this note, referring to the seminal work of Marshall, I question the traditional approach to surpluses, in particular the producer surplus. - Thus, Marshall s views seem to correspond to the perspective offered by the use of effective protection, a concept proposed by Corden. - Relying on the concept of effective protection based on value-added and a new interpretation of Marshall s surplus concept, I propose a revised measure of the producer surplus and show that the traditional or orthodox welfare case for full trade liberalization can hardly be supported, on the contrary, there might be an obvious argument for advocating some level of protectionism, in particular in a global economy with growing inequalities in terms of incomes and wealth.

4 References Barber, C.L. 1955: Canadian tariff policy, Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 21, November, pp. 513-30. Corden, W.M. 1966: The structure of a tariff system and the effective protective rate, Journal of Political Economy 74(3), June, pp. 221-37. Corden, W.M.: Effective Protection and I, History of Economics Review, Summer 2005, pp. 1-11. (On the web). Marshall, Alfred (1920): Principles of Economics (Revised Edition ed.). London: Macmillan; reprinted by Prometheus Books. (On the web). Francisco Rodriguez and Dani Rodrick: Trade Policy and Economic Growth: A Skeptic's Guide to the Cross-National Evidence, NBER Macroec.onomics Annual 2000, Volume 15. (On the web). Dani Rodrick: The Tyranny of Political Economy, Project Syndicate, FEB 8, 2013. (On the web). The European: Conversations Thomas Piketty on globalization s ills, 12 December 2014. (On the web).

5